James Casteel ( He/Him )
Director, College of Global Studies / EURUS Program Director & Graduate Supervisor / Associate Professor 鈥 Modern and Contemporary European History
- Ph.D. (Rutgers University), M.A. (University of Chicago), B.A. (Tulane University)
- Email James Casteel
James Casteel is a historian of modern and contemporary Europe cross-appointed between the Institute of European, Russian and Eurasian Studies (EURUS) and the Bachelor of Global and International Studies in the College of Global Studies. He is currently serving as Director of the College of Global Studies and Program Director and Graduate Supervisor for EURUS.
Professor Casteel holds a B.A. in German and Philosophy from Tulane University (1994), an M.A. in the Social Sciences from the University of Chicago (1997) and a Ph.D. in modern European history from Rutgers University (2005). He spent significant time studying in Germany at the Humboldt Universit盲t zu Berlin, the Universit盲t Hamburg, and the Johannes Gutenberg Universit盲t Mainz. He has held fellowships and grants from Fulbright, the Rutgers Centre for Historical Analysis, the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), and the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). He has been a visiting scholar at the Institute for East European Studies at the Free University of Berlin and the Selma Stern Centre for Jewish Studies Berlin-Brandenburg. From January 2019-December 2022 he served as the founding Program Director for the MA and Graduate Diploma programs in Migration and Diaspora Studies and he has been EURUS Director since 2025.
Research Interests Relates to European, Russian and Eurasian Studies:
Professor Casteel鈥檚 research interests include transnational relations between Germany and Russia from the nineteenth to twenty-first centuries, nations and empires in central and eastern Europe, diasporic cultures and belonging, European Jewish history including the Holocaust, and transnational and global approaches to the European past. His current research focuses on post-Soviet migrants in Germany (mostly Jews and ethnic Germans from the countries of the former Soviet Union) and issues of memory.
Current Research Projects:
Post-Soviet Migrants and Changing Memory Regimes in Germany, 1987-2018 (funded by SSHRC Insight Grant)
Current Teaching:
- EURR 1000 Introduction to European, Russian and Eurasian Studies
- EURR 4201/5201/MGDS 5002 Migration and Muticulturalism in Europe and Eurasia,1945 to present (co-taught with Jeff Sahadeo)
- EURR 4204/5204/HIST 4604/5604 Central Europe: Past and Present
- EURR 4303/5303/HIST 4606 Contemporary Europe: From Postwar to the European Union
- EURR 4202/5202 Nazism and Stalinism (co-taught with Jeff Sahadeo)
- EURR 5001 鈥淚nterdisciplinary Seminar in European, Russian and Eurasian Studies (team taught course)
- EURR 5010 Research Design and Methodology in Europe, Russia, and Eurasian Studies (team taught course)
- GINS 1000 Global History
- GINS 4090 Global Fascism
Selected Publication relating to European, Russian and Eurasian Studies:
Books:
- (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2016)
- Short-Listed for Council for European Studies Book Award 2018
Journal articles and book chapters:
- “Russian German History as Global History: Beyond Ethnonational Frames.” In: , ed. Anna Flack, Jan Musekamp, Jannis Panagiotidis, and Hans-Christian Petersen (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2024).
- 鈥淭ranscultural Memories among Russian German and Russian Jewish Migrants in Germany: Literature, Museums, and Narrations of the Soviet Past,鈥 in ed. Victor D枚nninghaus, Jannis Panagiotidis, & Hans-Christian Petersen (Oldenbourg: DeGruyter, 2018), 179-204.
- 鈥,鈥 Cultural and Social History 11, no. 2 (Spring 2015), 255-272.
- 鈥,鈥 First World War Studies 5, no. 3 (2014), 287-304.
- 鈥,鈥 in The Nation State & Beyond: Governing Globalization Processes in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century, ed. Roland Wenzelhuemer and Isabel Loehr, Transcultural Research. Heidelberg Studies on Asia and Europe in a Global Context (Heidelberg: Springer Verlag, 2013), 209-233.
- “,鈥 in Transnational Europe: Problems, Paradox, Limits, ed. Achim Hurrelmann and Joan DeBardeleben (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011), 153-169.
- 鈥,鈥 in German Diasporic Experiences: Identity, Migration, and Loss, ed. Mathias Schulze, et. al. (Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2008), 117-130.
- 鈥,鈥 Central European History 40, no. 3 (2007), 429-466.
Recent Papers Presented (selected):
- 鈥淓ntangled Memories of the End of Empires among Migrants from the former Soviet Union in Germany,鈥 for international conference 鈥淏etween Perestroika and the War in Ukraine: Alternative Temporalities in Eastern European and Jewish Histories,鈥 Research Center for the History of Transformations (RECET), University of Vienna, June 29-30, 2026.
- 鈥淢igration Perspectives in German Studies,鈥 German Studies Association, Arlington, VA, September 25-28, 2025. Presented paper and co-organized roundtable together with Katya Soloeva Woodyard 鈥淭ransforming German Studies Through Migration Perspectives.鈥
- 鈥淏ridging Divides Between German Studies and Migration Studies,鈥 6th Annual Montreal Central European Studies Workshop, Universit茅 de Montr茅al, March 13-14, 2025.
- “Entangled Histories of Decolonization: Post-Soviet Migrants and Memory Cultures in Germany”, German Studies Association, Atlanta, GA, September 26-29, 2024.
- 鈥淧ost-Soviet Migrants and Transcultural Memories in Germany,鈥 Paper presented at the Association for the Study of Nationalities 2023 World Convention, New York, NY, May 18-20, 2023.
- 鈥淒ecolonizations, Legacies of Empires, and Migrations in German Histories: Post-Soviet Perspectives.鈥 Montreal Central European Studies Workshop, March 9-10, 2023.
- 鈥淩ussian German History as Global History: Beyond Ethnonational Frames,鈥 International Conference 鈥淩ussian Germans on Four Continents: Global History and Present,鈥 Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies, University of Osnabr眉ck, Germany (conference held virtually due to COVID-19). November 10-12, 2021.
- 鈥淢igrant Memories: Narrating Post-Soviet Migration in Germany鈥 German Studies Association (conference held virtually due to COVID-19), October 1-3, 2020.
- 鈥淣arratives of Victimization among Post-Soviet Migrants in Germany,鈥 International Conference on 鈥淣arratives of Forced Migration in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries,鈥 University of Stirling, Scotland, U.K, September 16-18, 2019.
- 鈥淢igration and Transformation of Berlin鈥檚 Jewish Community: from Postwar to Post-Soviet,鈥 Leo Baeck Summer University, July 9, 2019 (invited lecture).
- 鈥淧ost-Soviet Migrant Memories: Russian-Jewish and Russian-German Commemorative Narratives in Germany鈥, Selma-Stern Zentrum f眉r J眉dische Studien Berlin-Brandenburg (Selma Stern Centre for Jewish Studies Berlin-Brandenburg), June 6, 2019 (invited lecture).
- 鈥淧ost-Soviet Migrants, Memory Politics, and Responses to Refugees in Germany,鈥 23rd Annual Convention of the Association for the Study of Nationalities, Columbia University, New York, NY, May 3-5, 2018.
- 鈥淭ranscultural Memories and Diasporic Identities among Russian German and Jewish Migrants from the former Soviet Union to Germany,鈥 for international conference 鈥淩ussian Germans in a Comparative Context: New Research Perspectives,鈥 Federal Institute for Culture and History of the Germans from Eastern Europe, Berlin, Germany, November 18-19, 2015.